Konstantin Vasilievich Ivanov (1894-1977) - member of the White Movement in southern Russia , commander of the officer battalion of the 2nd Kornilovsky Regiment , colonel.
| Konstantin Vasilievich Ivanov | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | May 21 ( June 3 ) 1894 |
| Place of Birth | St. Petersburg province |
| Date of death | February 15, 1977 (82 years old) |
| A place of death | Paris , France |
| Affiliation | |
| Rank | Colonel |
| Awards and prizes | |
Biography
From the nobles. He was educated at the St. Petersburg Theological Seminary , where he graduated from two classes. He served in the 145th Novocherkassk Infantry Regiment ; on February 24, 1914 he was promoted to ensign of the army infantry reserve in St. Petersburg district .
With the outbreak of World War I , the Preobrazhensky Regiment was drafted into the Life Guards and appointed a junior officer in the 11th company. He was wounded twice, for military distinctions he was awarded several orders, including the Order of St. Anne of the 4th degree with the inscription "for courage." He was promoted to second lieutenant on November 9, 1915, lieutenants on July 7, 1916, and to lieutenant captains on November 25 of that year. On May 2, 1917 - the commander of the 11th company of the Preobrazhensky regiment. He was promoted to captain on September 23, 1917.
In the Civil War, he participated in the White Movement in southern Russia as part of the All-Union Socialist League and the Russian Army . In July 1919 he was appointed assistant commander of an officer company of the newly formed 2nd Kornilov Regiment . In September 1919 he was appointed commander of an officer company of the named regiment, and then commander of an officer battalion into which a company was deployed. In July 1920, in Crimea - the battalion commander in the 2nd Kornilovsky regiment, in which position remained until the evacuation of Crimea . On December 18, 1920 - at the headquarters of the 2nd battalion of the Kornilovsky regiment in Gallipoli . In the same year he was promoted to colonel and for some time was an assistant commander of the 2nd battalion, Colonel Levitov . Since 1925, he was the commander of the battalion of the Kornilovsky military school , and served as head of the school.
Since the early 1930s in exile in France. He was the head of the National Organization of Russian Intelligence (NORR) in France. He was a member of the Guards Association and the Life Guards Association of the Preobrazhensky Regiment, as well as a member of the Paris department of the Union of Russian Military Invalids in France. In 1960, he participated in the congress of the Union of Russian military invalids in France. He died in 1977 in Paris. He was buried in the cemetery of Saint-Genevieve-des-Bois . Was married.
Rewards
- Order of St. Anne 4th Art. with the inscription "for courage" (VP 9.02.1915)
- Order of St. Stanislav 3rd Art. with swords and bow (VP 15.09.1915)
- Order of St. Anne, 3rd art. with swords and bow (VP 31.01.1917)
Sources
- The highest orders of the War Department to No. 1218 // Scout . - SPb. ( PG. ), 1914 .-- S. 85 .
- List of generals, headquarters and chief officers, class officials and the clergy of the Life Guards Preobrazhensky Regiment. By January 1, 1916. - S. 31 . // In memory of the heroes of the Great War of 1914-1918.
- Army and Navy of Free Russia , No. 230. Official Division. - October 7, 1917 - S. 1.
- Levitov M.N. Materials for the history of the Kornilov shock regiment. - Paris, 1974.
- Volkov S.V. White movement. Encyclopedia of Civil War. - St. Petersburg: "Neva", 2002. - S. 218.
- Zubov Yu.V. Life-Guards Preobrazhensky Regiment: with a regiment of great-grandfathers and grandfathers in the great war of 1914-1917 - Moscow, 2014.